Insisting on Yucca Mountain is a Strategic Blunder

I am one of the biggest nuclear technology fans I know, but I have to express my strong disappointment in the people who are making decisions for the nuclear industry. They are tone deaf when it comes to politics and marketing. We are on the cusp of a tremendous opportunity to take the initiative and…

Saudi Oil – 60 Minutes Interview Part 2

Part 2 of 2 – CBS correspondent Lesley Stahl and the 60 minutes crew provide a look inside Saudi Aramco, the world’s most profitable company and its largest oil supplier – by far. The interviews focus on Ali Al-Naimi, the Saudi Oil Minister, but also include discussions with Abdallah Jum’ah, Saudi Aramco’s president and CEO,…

Saudi Oil – 60 Minutes Interview Part 1

Part 1 of 2 – CBS News correspondent Lesley Stahl and the 60 minutes crew provide a look inside Saudi Aramco, the world’s most profitable company and its largest oil supplier – by far. It is incumbent on any good nuclear proponent to understand as much as possible about the overall market in which our…

Did the World Bank Tell Eskom to Cancel the PWR Project?

I ran across a Reuters article that got me thinking. On December 4, 2008, Reuters reported that the World Bank had agreed to loan Eskom up to $5 Billion for a power capacity expansion program deemed crucial to the mining sector. On that same day, Eskom’s board met and determined that it would no longer…

Atomic Show 116 – Clean Money by John Rubino

On Thursday I spoke with John Rubino, the author of Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom. You can listen in to our conversation at Atomic Show #116. You might learn something that could be valuable in the future.

More Questioning About the Zion Reactors

Back in June 2008, I wrote about an effort to save the two reactor Zion Nuclear Power Station from decommissioning. For those who do not remember, or who cannot be bothered to follow a provided link, here is a brief synopsis of that blog post. In January 1998, Commonwealth Edison, now part of Exelon, reported…

Wonder Cornucopia of Alternative Fission Paths – Or Confusing Jumble Indicating Lack of Decisiveness?

Over the past few days I have been engaged in some very interesting email correspondence with a number of talented, aggressive, inquisitive people who are excited about various ways to use fission based technologies as contributing ways to solve a number of pressing economic, energy and ecological challenges. As a sometimes participant and sometimes observer…

December 2 – important day for self sustaining fission

On December 2, 1942, Enrico Fermi and a small team started, controlled and stopped the first fission chain reaction in a graphite/uranium pile in a squash court under the stands at a defunct football stadium at the University of Chicago. On December 2, 1957, the Shippingport Atomic Power Plant began full power operation. It was…